This is an undated photo of John Yoo, professor of law at the University of California at Berkeley. Students at the University of California, Berkeley's Boalt School of Law say a legal memo that Yoo co-wrote while working for the U.S. Department of Justice "contributed directly to the reprehensible violation of human rights in Iraq and elsewhere," according to a petition being circulated among students and faculty. (AP Photo/University of California, Berkeley)
John Yoo
John Yoo
Ran on: 06-12-2004
UC law professor John Yoo
Ran on: 06-12-2004
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Ran on: 10-24-2004
Timothy Flanigan
ALSO Ran on: 11-13-2005
Before going abroad, John Yoo (left) and David Addington (center) might study the case of Augusto Pinochet (right).
Ran on: 01-05-2008
John Yoo wrote memo. less

This is an undated photo of John Yoo, professor of law at the University of California at Berkeley. Students at the University of California, Berkeley's Boalt School of Law say a legal memo that Yoo co-wrote ... more

Photo: Associated Press

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Jay Bybee testifies before a congressional committee investigating ties between the agency and organized crime in Washington Thursday, Feb. 14, 2002. Chairman Dan Burton, R-Ind., is using the case to pressure the Justice Department into turning over relevant documents less

Jay Bybee testifies before a congressional committee investigating ties between the agency and organized crime in Washington Thursday, Feb. 14, 2002. Chairman Dan Burton, R-Ind., is using the case to pressure ... more

Photo: Evan Vucci, AP

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Emanuel: Torture policymakers in the clear

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President Barack Obama does not intend to prosecute Bush administration officials who devised the policies that led to the harsh interrogation of suspected terrorists, White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel said Sunday.

Obama last week authorized the release of a series of memos detailing the methods approved under President George W. Bush. In an accompanying statement, he said, "It is our intention to assure those who carried out their duties relying in good faith upon legal advice from the Department of Justice, that they will not be subject to prosecution." He did not specifically address the policymakers.

Asked Sunday on ABC's "This Week" about the fate of the policymakers, Emanuel said the president believes they "should not be prosecuted either."

GOP Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said on Fox News that the idea of "criminalizing legal advice after one administration is out of the office is a very bad precedent. ... I think it would be disaster to go back and try to prosecute a lawyer for giving legal advice that you disagreed with to a former president."

The decision not to seek charges against the interrogators has been criticized by the American Civil Liberties Union and called a violation of international law by the U.N.'s top torture investigator.

In his statement last week, the president said: "This is a time for reflection, not retribution. I respect the strong views and emotions that these issues evoke. We have been through a dark and painful chapter in our history. But at a time of great challenges and disturbing disunity, nothing will be gained by spending our time and energy laying blame for the past."

Republican lawmakers and others contend that national security was undermined by the release of the memos. On Sunday, Obama administration officials rejected the criticism.

"We are absolutely confident that we have the tools necessary to get the information we need to keep this country safe," senior presidential adviser David Axelrod said on "Face the Nation." "And we don't believe and the president of the United States does not believe that this is a contest between our values and our security. He thinks we can honor both and execute both. And that's what he's going to do."

Michael Hayden, who led the CIA under Bush, said the public release of the memos will make it harder to get useful information from suspected terrorists being detained by the United States.

"I think that teaching our enemies our outer limits, by taking techniques off the table, we have made it more difficult in a whole host of circumstances I can imagine, more difficult for CIA officers to defend the nation," Hayden said on Fox.

Administration officials said information in the memos already was in the public realm and that releasing details about interrogation techniques gave no new edge to al Qaeda and other terrorist groups.

Emanuel said that as a result of Obama's decision, "we've enhanced America's image abroad. These were tools used by terrorists, propaganda tools, to recruit new terrorists. And the fact is, having changed America's image does have an impact on our security and safety and makes us stronger."

But Hayden said many who oppose the harsh techniques used by interrogations "want to be able to say, 'I don't want my nation doing this,' which is a purely honorable position, 'and they didn't work anyway.' That back half of the sentence isn't true. The facts of the case are that the use of these techniques against these terrorists made us safer. It really did work."

In Bay Area: Odd twist in case of former Guantanamo Bay prisoner - letter could land his lawyers in jail. B1